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William Andrews
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William Andrews made his stand-up debut in stand up as the character Tony Carter, with which he made his solo debut at the 2004 Fringe. He is also a sketch performer, appearing in the 2007 Edinburgh show The Ugly Kid, which was nominated for a 2008 Chortle Award, and the following year he partnered with Greg McHugh for the Will And Greg show. He is also a member of cast of the BBC children's sketch show Sorry I’ve Got No Head. |
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William Andrews: Nitwit - Fringe 2009 |
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Some things are so out-and-out bonkers that the star system of reviews seems hopelessly inadequate. In keeping with the nonsense that is William Andrews’s deranged show, we might as well rate it ‘mauve’ as allocate marks out of five. But follow convention we must, and sad to report that this ramshackle multimedia hybrid just doesn’t come off – however much you might want it to. Andrews, one half of last year’s lovely Will and Greg sketch show, is an endearing performer, bringing to the stage a vulnerable, distracted style that remains naturalistic whatever odd things he may be doing. It means you humour his innocence, so that even when he gaffer-tapes his chunky microphone to his head – creating what looks like an early prototype of the Madonna-style cheek mic – for the duration, it seems almost normal. But behind that unfocussed exterior, Andrews is clearly a sharp operator, as proved by the split-second timing he needs to interact with the screen on the front of his centre-stage box of tricks. It projects some of the usual Flash/PowerPoint trickery, and sometimes becomes another character in a sketch, such as the drunk and helpless nightclubber – played by a videotaped Anna Crilly – which he awkwardly takes home in one realistically unsatisfying scene. The box also contains a record-player, on which he plays us a couple of charity-box finds by Mister Rogers and Ed ‘Stewpot’ Stewart, in a stand-uppy segment about the former Crackerjack host’s shockingly young wife. I could list everything Andrews did or spoke about, but it would simply be a catalogue of meaningless, unconnected ideas, hard to make much sense of – which is why the audience was largely left baffled. When he pulled out his canister of jokes (literally), he does get a few laughs, but deliberately performs them like a faltering nerve-crippled open spot, killing them dead. A few other scenes almost shine, such as the Dambusters spoof rendered unintelligible under the weight of clipped vowels; while the silly big finale is almost worth an extra star on its own, but it was rushed and misfired. Within minutes of this mish-mash of a show ending, the publicist emailed to tell me this had been was an off-night, and asked if that could be taken into consideration… although I don’t think reviewing a hypothetically better version of actual performances will really catch on. But I share that information, as it is quite possible Andrews is a misunderstood genius, struggling to express himself with consistency. For there is something about him – but whatever it is, it’s just not that reliably funny on the evidence of this show. |
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| Date of live review: Thursday 13th Aug, '09 | |
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Review by Steve Bennett |
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Show - Edinburgh Fringe 2008 - | |
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One of the best shows at last year's fringe. Another ridiculous review keep up the sh*t work Chortle Vince, April 2011 |
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Just read the chortle review and wonder if I went to the same show. Some fuckwit brought their nine year old to the show which meant some of the harder stuff got dropped but the show itself was a delight.Will is a fantastic performer - he coped well with the previously mentioned child and had the half full room laughing the whole way through. Having seen him in previous years his love for tunes and jokes came through and this was a definite 4 and maybe a 4.5 if princess nine-year-old hadn't turned up Andy Barr, August 2009 |
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Best show I've seen so far this Fringe, can't see anyone topping it, although Tim Key came close. Reviewer must have seen an off night, cos the night I went was brilliant (Sat 8th) and the audience all seemed to love it. RedPill, August 2009 |
Where can I see William Andrews next?
| 19:45 - Tuesday 6th Mar, '12 | |
| Venue: | Invisible Dot |
| Prices: | £6 |
| Comics: | William Andrews |
| Info: | Work in progress |

Tony Carter's Evil Army
Edinburgh Fringe 2005
Tony Carter: Benefit Fraudster
Edinburgh Fringe 2007
Ugly Kid
Edinburgh Fringe 2008
Will & Greg: A Sketch Show
Edinburgh Fringe 2009
Gagarin Way
William Andrews: Nitwit

